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Liverpool's stadium move granted | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Liverpool Football Club's plans for a new £400m stadium have been passed. | Liverpool Football Club's plans for a new £400m stadium have been passed. |
The 60,000 capacity ground at Stanley Park has been unanimously approved by Liverpool City Council planning committee after a five-hour meeting. | The 60,000 capacity ground at Stanley Park has been unanimously approved by Liverpool City Council planning committee after a five-hour meeting. |
The Premier League club's new stadium will hold 15,000 more fans than the existing site, but that could increase to 75,000 in the future. | |
The plans were resubmitted because American owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks were unhappy with the originals. | |
It's a fantastic job to be involved with, a fantastic city and fantastic club Paul Hyett, HKS Architects Chairman | |
The new stadium will house 114 executive boxes, twice the number in the original design, and will regenerate public land which stands between Anfield and Everton's ground, Goodison Park. | |
Paul Hyett, chairman of HKS Architects in charge of the stadium project, said: "You don't often get one like this to deal with. Most people never get to work on one like this. | Paul Hyett, chairman of HKS Architects in charge of the stadium project, said: "You don't often get one like this to deal with. Most people never get to work on one like this. |
"It's a fantastic job to be involved with, a fantastic city and fantastic club." | "It's a fantastic job to be involved with, a fantastic city and fantastic club." |
A spokesman for Liverpool FC said work on the new stadium could begin almost immediately and was expected to be finished by August 2011. | A spokesman for Liverpool FC said work on the new stadium could begin almost immediately and was expected to be finished by August 2011. |
Construction of the new ground means the Stanley Park area will benefit from £14m of Government funding. | |
'Monstrous sized' | |
Despite celebration over the approval, the club's application has been widely opposed by residents living near to the new development and the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England. | |
Local councillor Steve Radford called it a "monstrous sized development" that should not have been passed. | |
He said: "I believe the officers of the council have acted as agents of the club, not agents of the people." | |
The Reds' current home will be redeveloped as a car park, sports centre and hotel. | |
Talks are under way with families of Hillsborough victims about moving the 1989 memorial. |
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